Jul. 4th, 2012

joreth: (anger)
So there's this dickhead who saw a graphic I made to sell on one of my t-shirt sites online and thought "hey, that's a pretty cool graphic, I bet I can sell stuff with it online too!"  He took the graphic, then did stuff like "splining" and spent a whole ton of hours on it to end up with a graphic that looks EXACTLY LIKE MINE.  Then he did more stuff and spent more hours on it to end up with a second graphic that looks EXACTLY LIKE MINE but rainbow colored.  Then he slapped it on a bunch of items from Zazzle and started trying to sell it.

According to the storefront, this is what he does: "This store represents the wild creations which flew by and I happened to reach out and catch a bit of. Hopefully I will be able to catch more as time goes by."

The tricky part is that the image is made of elements that you can't copyright.  For example, I can't copyright the teardrop shape.  But I can copyright or trademark a specific teardrop that is stylistically unique and recognizable.  Then, if you open a store and want to sell something with a teardrop on it, you can make your own teardrop that looks different from mine but still looks like a teardrop and you're not in violation of copyright.

But this guy's version doesn't look any different from mine, except it's a different color.  It is obviously, clearly, and recognizably my graphic.  For the original image that is the same color, he didn't even bother to remove that grey-ish background that's actually a black t-shirt material from my own store's thumbnail before putting it on a couple dozen items like keychains and greeting cards and aprons.  Seriously, if you look at his keychain, it's a round keychain with a grey-black square and my graphic in the middle, just like the close-up image of my t-shirts.

So, I sent a cease & desist letter.  He responded, defending his right to use my graphics because of how much he "changed" in the picture.  I reported the violation to the Zazzle complaint department, and he removed a few of the products, but not all of them, still insisting that making it rainbow colored is enough of a change to justify using my graphic.

So now I need a lawyer.  I have all the correspondence, plus the original Photoshop elements of the graphic under contention, and I need to know what to do from here.  Any recommendations for lawyers, or any lawyers out there willing to give legal advice?

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